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Dive into the research topics where Patrick Viatour is active.

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Featured researches published by Patrick Viatour.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2000

Nuclear factor-kappa B, cancer, and apoptosis.

Vincent Bours; Mohamed Bentires-Alj; Anne-Cécile Hellin; Patrick Viatour; Pierre Robe; Sylvie Delhalle; Valérie Benoit; Marie-Paule Merville

The role of nuclear factor (NF)-kappa B in the regulation of apoptosis in normal and cancer cells has been extensively studied in recent years. Constitutive NF-kappa B activity in B lymphocytes as well as in Hodgkins disease and breast cancer cells protects these cells against apoptosis. It has also been reported that NF-kappa B activation by tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, chemotherapeutic drugs, or ionizing radiations can protect several cell types against apoptosis, suggesting that NF-kappa B could participate in resistance to cancer treatment. These observations were explained by the regulation of antiapoptotic gene expression by NF-kappa B. However, in our experience, inhibition of NF-kappa B activity in several cancer cell lines has a very variable effect on cell mortality, depending on the cell type, the stimulus, and the level of NF-kappa B inhibition. Moreover, in some experimental systems, NF-kappa B activation is required for the onset of apoptosis. Therefore, it is likely that the NF-kappa B antiapoptotic role in response to chemotherapy is cell type- and signal-dependent and that the level of NF-kappa B inhibition is important. These issues will have to be carefully investigated before considering NF-kappa B as a target for genetic or pharmacological anticancer therapies.


Leukemia | 2003

NF-kappa B2/p100 induces Bcl-2 expression

Patrick Viatour; M Bentires-Alj; Alain Chariot; V Deregowski; L. de Leval; M-P Merville; Vincent Bours

The NF-κB2/p100 and bcl-3 genes are involved in chromosomal translocations described in chronic lymphocytic leukemias (CLL) and non-Hodgkins lymphomas, and nuclear factor kappaB (NF-κB) protects cancer cells against apoptosis. Therefore, we investigated whether this transcription factor could modulate the expression of the Bcl-2 antiapoptotic protein. Bcl-2 promoter analysis showed multiple putative NF-κB binding sites. Transfection assays of bcl-2 promoter constructs in HCT116 cells showed that NF-κB can indeed transactivate bcl-2. We identified a κB site located at position −180 that can only be bound and transactivated by p50 or p52 homodimers. As p50 and p52 homodimers are devoid of any transactivating domains, we showed that they can transactivate the bcl-2 promoter through association with Bcl-3. We also observed that stable overexpression of p100 and its processed product p52 can induce endogenous Bcl-2 expression in MCF7AZ breast cancer cells. Finally, we demonstrated that, in breast cancer and leukemic cells (CLL), high NF-κB2/p100 expression was associated with high Bcl-2 expression. Our data suggest that Bcl-2 could be an in vivo target gene for NF-κB2/p100.


Cell Stem Cell | 2008

Hematopoietic stem cell quiescence is maintained by compound contributions of the retinoblastoma gene family.

Patrick Viatour; Tim C.P. Somervaille; Shivkumar Venkatasubrahmanyam; Scott C. Kogan; Margaret McLaughlin; Irving L. Weissman; Atul J. Butte; Emmanuelle Passegué; Julien Sage

Individual members of the retinoblastoma (Rb) tumor suppressor gene family serve critical roles in the control of cellular proliferation and differentiation, but the extent of their contributions is masked by redundant and compensatory mechanisms. Here we employed a conditional knockout strategy to simultaneously inactivate all three members, Rb, p107, and p130, in adult hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). Rb family triple knockout (TKO) mice develop a cell-intrinsic myeloproliferation that originates from hyperproliferative early hematopoietic progenitors and is accompanied by increased apoptosis in lymphoid progenitor populations. Loss of quiescence in the TKO HSC pool is associated with an expansion of these mutant stem cells but also with an enhanced mobilization and an impaired reconstitution potential upon transplantation. The presence of a single p107 allele is sufficient to largely rescue these defects. Thus, Rb family members collectively maintain HSC quiescence and the balance between lymphoid and myeloid cell fates in the hematopoietic system.


Oncogene | 2001

Inhibition of the Nf-Kappa B Transcription Factor Increases Bax Expression in Cancer Cell Lines

Mohamed Bentires-Alj; Emmanuel Dejardin; Patrick Viatour; Carine Van Lint; Barbara A. Froesch; John C. Reed; Marie-Paule Merville; Vincent Bours

The NF-κB transcription factor has been shown to inhibit apoptosis in several experimental systems. We therefore investigated whether the expression of the Bax proapoptotic protein could be influenced by NF-κB activity. Increased Bax protein expression was detected in HCT116, OVCAR-3 and MCF7 cells stably expressing a mutated unresponsive IκB-α inhibitory protein that blocks NF-κB activity. Northern blots showed that bax mRNA expression was increased as a consequence of mutated IκB-α expression in HCT116 cells. A careful examination of the human bax gene promoter sequence showed three putative binding sites for NF-κB, and the κB2 site at position -687 could indeed bind NF-κB complexes in vitro. Transient transfection of a bax promoter luciferase construct in HCT116 cells showed that NF-κB proteins could partially inhibit the transactivation of the bax promoter by p53. Mutations or deletions of the κB sites, including κB2, indicated that this NF-κB-dependent inhibitory effect did not require NF-κB DNA-binding, and was thus an indirect effect. However, cotransfection of expression vectors for several known cofactors failed to identify a competition between p53 and NF-κB for a transcription coactivator. Our findings thus demonstrate for the first time that NF-κB regulates, through an indirect pathway, the bax gene expression.


Disease Models & Mechanisms | 2011

Newly identified aspects of tumor suppression by RB

Patrick Viatour; Julien Sage

The retinoblastoma (RB) tumor suppressor belongs to a cellular pathway that plays a crucial role in restricting the G1-S transition of the cell cycle in response to a large number of extracellular and intracellular cues. Research in the last decade has highlighted the complexity of regulatory networks that ensure proper cell cycle progression, and has also identified multiple cellular functions beyond cell cycle regulation for RB and its two family members, p107 and p130. Here we review some of the recent evidence pointing to a role of RB as a molecular adaptor at the crossroads of multiple pathways, ensuring cellular homeostasis in different contexts. In particular, we discuss the pro- and anti-tumorigenic roles of RB during the early stages of cancer, as well as the importance of the RB pathway in stem cells and cell fate decisions.


Genome Research | 2011

MicroRNA programs in normal and aberrant stem and progenitor cells

Christopher P. Arnold; Ruoying Tan; Baiyu Zhou; Si Biao Yue; Steven Schaffert; Joseph R. Biggs; Regis Doyonnas; Miao Chia Lo; John M. Perry; Valérie M. Renault; Alessandra Sacco; Tim C.P. Somervaille; Patrick Viatour; Anne Brunet; Michael L. Cleary; Linheng Li; Julien Sage; Dong-Er Zhang; Helen M. Blau; Caifu Chen; Chang Zheng Chen

Emerging evidence suggests that microRNAs (miRNAs), an abundant class of ∼22-nucleotide small regulatory RNAs, play key roles in controlling the post-transcriptional genetic programs in stem and progenitor cells. Here we systematically examined miRNA expression profiles in various adult tissue-specific stem cells and their differentiated counterparts. These analyses revealed miRNA programs that are common or unique to blood, muscle, and neural stem cell populations and miRNA signatures that mark the transitions from self-renewing and quiescent stem cells to proliferative and differentiating progenitor cells. Moreover, we identified a stem/progenitor transition miRNA (SPT-miRNA) signature that predicts the effects of genetic perturbations, such as loss of PTEN and the Rb family, AML1-ETO9a expression, and MLL-AF10 transformation, on self-renewal and proliferation potentials of mutant stem/progenitor cells. We showed that some of the SPT-miRNAs control the self-renewal of embryonic stem cells and the reconstitution potential of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). Finally, we demonstrated that SPT-miRNAs coordinately regulate genes that are known to play roles in controlling HSC self-renewal, such as Hoxb6 and Hoxa4. Together, these analyses reveal the miRNA programs that may control key processes in normal and aberrant stem and progenitor cells, setting the foundations for dissecting post-transcriptional regulatory networks in stem cells.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2010

Regulation of RB Transcription In Vivo by RB Family Members

Deborah L. Burkhart; Lynn K. Ngai; Caitlin M. Roake; Patrick Viatour; Chellappagounder Thangavel; Victoria M. Ho; Erik S. Knudsen; Julien Sage

ABSTRACT In cancer cells, the retinoblastoma tumor suppressor RB is directly inactivated by mutation in the RB gene or functionally inhibited by abnormal activation of cyclin-dependent kinase activity. While variations in RB levels may also provide an important means of controlling RB function in both normal and cancer cells, little is known about the mechanisms regulating RB transcription. Here we show that members of the RB and E2F families bind directly to the RB promoter. To investigate how the RB/E2F pathway may regulate Rb transcription, we generated reporter mice carrying an eGFP transgene inserted into a bacterial artificial chromosome containing most of the Rb gene. Expression of eGFP largely parallels that of Rb in transgenic embryos and adult mice. Using these reporter mice and mutant alleles for Rb, p107, and p130, we found that RB family members modulate Rb transcription in specific cell populations in vivo and in culture. Interestingly, while Rb is a target of the RB/E2F pathway in mouse and human cells, Rb expression does not strictly correlate with the cell cycle status of these cells. These experiments identify novel regulatory feedback mechanisms within the RB pathway in mammalian cells.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2013

Inactivation of the RB family prevents thymus involution and promotes thymic function by direct control of Foxn1 expression

Phillip M. Garfin; Dullei Min; Jerrod L. Bryson; Thomas Serwold; Badreddin Edris; C. Clare Blackburn; Ellen R. Richie; Kenneth I. Weinberg; Nancy R. Manley; Julien Sage; Patrick Viatour

RB family genes control T cell production and promote thymic involution through reducing Foxn1 expression in thymic epithelial cells.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2010

G1 arrest and differentiation can occur independently of Rb family function

Stacey E. Wirt; Adam S. Adler; Véronique Gebala; James M. Weimann; Bethany E. Schaffer; Louis A. Saddic; Patrick Viatour; Hannes Vogel; Howard Y. Chang; Alex Meissner; Julien Sage

Repression of E2F target genes is required for cell cycle arrest in Rb family (Rb, p107, and p130)-deficient cells.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2010

The Repressing Function of the Oncoprotein BCL-3 Requires CtBP, while Its Polyubiquitination and Degradation Involve the E3 Ligase TBLR1

Aurore Keutgens; Kateryna Shostak; Pierre Close; Xin Zhang; Benoit Hennuy; Marie Aussems; Jean-Paul Chapelle; Patrick Viatour; André Gothot; Marianne Fillet; Alain Chariot

ABSTRACT The nuclear and oncogenic BCL-3 protein activates or represses gene transcription when bound to NF-κB proteins p50 and p52, yet the molecules that specifically interact with BCL-3 and drive BCL-3-mediated effects on gene expression remain largely uncharacterized. Moreover, GSK3-mediated phosphorylation of BCL-3 triggers its degradation through the proteasome, but the proteins involved in this degradative pathway are poorly characterized. Biochemical purification of interacting partners of BCL-3 led to the identification of CtBP as a molecule required for the ability of BCL-3 to repress gene transcription. CtBP is also required for the oncogenic potential of BCL-3 and for its ability to inhibit UV-mediated cell apoptosis in keratinocytes. We also defined the E3 ligase TBLR1 as a protein involved in BCL-3 degradation through a GSK3-independent pathway. Thus, our data demonstrate that the LSD1/CtBP complex is required for the repressing abilities of an oncogenic IκB protein, and they establish a functional link between the E3 ligase TBLR1 and NF-κB.

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Ru Cao

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Yi Zhang

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Yue Xiong

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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